Step Forward for Agent Orange Clean-Up Effort in Vietnam

The US said the US$1.69-million project will involve building a secure landfill site to hold contaminated soil and sediment at Da Nang airport. Working with the government of Vietnam, the US expects the project to be finished within a year, a US embassy press release said. During the Vietnam War, US forces stored Agent Orange at Da Nang and other bases where it was loaded onto airplanes for defoliation missions. Jungle areas that were sprayed do not have high levels of dioxin today, Thomas Boivin, president of Canadian environmental specialists Hatfield Consultants, has said. But US and Vietnamese officials have identified the old US bases in Da Nang, Bien Hoa – near the former Saigon – and Phu Cat as significant “hotspots” where spillage, washing of aircraft and loading of the herbicides contributed to contamination. At Danang airport now, dioxin levels are still 300-400 times higher than internationally accepted levels, Boivin said. Other donors are also assisting but the US is focusing its help on the Da Nang site, at Vietnam’s request.
“With this award, the US government has committed more than two-thirds of the six million dollars of Congressional funding it has received for Agent Orange/dioxin environmental remediation and health activities,” the US statement said.
Full-scale decontamination could take years.
The affected area is under Vietnamese military control and is separate from the passenger terminal in Vietnam’s fourth-largest city, which authorities want to promote as a tourist destination.